He left the three behind him, bewildered
and frightened. Had lightning split a thick tree
beside them, or an unexpected landslide thundered
past and swept the ground away at their feet, they
could have been hardly more disturbed.
“Who’d of thought he could
act like that!” remarked Joe. “My
gosh, Jessie!”
They went and looked at the hole where
the stump had stood. At the bottom was the white
remnant of the taproot where it had burst under the
strain.
“It wasn’t so much how
he pulled up the stump,” said the girl faintly.
“But — but did you see his face, boys,
after he heaved the stump up? I — just
pick that stump up, will you?”
They went to the misshapen, ragged
monster and lifted it, puffing under the weight.
“All right.”
They dropped it obediently.
“And he — he just swung
it around his head like it was nothing!” declared
the girl. “Look how it smashed into the
gravel where he threw it down! Why — why — I
didn’t know men was made like that. And
his face — the way he laughed — why
he didn’t look like no fool at all, boys.
But just as if he’d waked up!”
“You act so interested,”
said Harry Campbell dryly, “that maybe you’d
like to have us call him out again so’s you can
talk to him?”
Apparently she did not hear, but stared
down into the mist of the late afternoon, warning
her that she must start home. She seemed puzzled
and a little frightened. When she left them it
was with a wave of the hand and with no words of farewell.
They watched her go down the trail that jerked back
and forth across the pitch of the slope; twice her
pony stumbled, a sure sign that the rider was absent-minded.
“Jessie didn’t seem to
know what to make of it,” said Harry.
“Neither do I,” returned his brother.
Both of them spoke in subdued voices
as if they were afraid of being overheard.
“And think if he’d ever
lay a hold on one of us like that!” said Harry.
He went to the stump and examined the side of one of
the roots. It was stained with crimson.
“Look where his finger tips
worked through the dirt and the bark, right down to
the solid wood,” murmured Joe.
They looked at each other uneasily.
“My gosh,” said Joe, “think of the
way I handled him the other night! He — he
let me trip him up and throw him!” He shuddered.
“Why, if he’d laid hold of me just once,
he’d of squashed my muscles like they was rotten
fruit!”
Of one accord they turned back to
the house. At the door they paused and peered
in, as into the den of a bear. There sat Bull
on the floor — he risked his weight to none
of the crazy chairs — still looking at his
stained hands. Then they drew back and again looked
at each other with scared eyes and spoke in undertones.
“After this maybe he won’t
want to follow orders. Maybe he’ll get sort
of free and easy and independent.”
“If he does, you watch Dad give
him his marching orders. Dad won’t have
no one lifting heads agin’ him.”
“Neither will I,” snapped
Joe. “I guess we own this house. I
guess we support that big hulk. I’m going
to try him right quick.”
He went back to the door of the shack.
“Bull, they ain’t any wood for the stove
tonight. Go chop some quick.”
The floor squeaked and groaned under
Bull’s weight as he rose, and again the brothers
looked to each other.
“All right,” came cheerily from Bull Hunter.
He came through the door with his
ax and went to the log pile. The brothers watched
him throw aside the top logs and get at the heavier
trunks underneath. He tore one of these out, laid
it in place, and the sun flashed on the swift circle
of the ax. Joe and Harry stepped back as though
the light had blinded them.
“He didn’t never work like that before,”
declared Joe.
The ax was buried almost to the haft
in the tough wood, and the steel was wrenching out
with a squeak of the metal against the resisting wood.
Again the blinding circle and the indescribable sound
of the ax’s impact, slicing through the wood.
A great chip snapped up high over the shoulder of
the chopper and dropped solidly to the ground at the
feet of the brothers. Again they exchanged glances
and drew a little closer together. The log divided
under the shower of eating blows, and Bull attacked
the next section.
Presently he came to a pause, leaning
on the handle of the ax and staring into the distance.
At this the brothers sighed with relief.
“I guess he ain’t changed
so much,” said Harry. “But it was
queer, eh? Kind of like a bear waking up after
he’d been sleeping all winter!”
They jarred Bull out of his dream
with a shout and set him to work again; then they
started the preparations for the evening meal.
The simple preparations were soon completed, but after
the potatoes were boiled, they delayed frying the
bacon, for their father, old Bill Campbell, had not
yet returned from his hunting trip and he disliked
long-cooked food. Things had to be freshly served
to suit Bill, and his sons dared the wrath of heaven
rather than the biting reproaches of the old man.
It was strange that Bill delayed his
coming so long. As a rule he was always back
before the coming of evening. An old and practiced
mountaineer, he had never been known to lose sense
of direction or sense of distance, and he was an hour
overdue when the sun went down and the soft, beautiful
mountain twilight began.
There were other reasons which would
ordinarily have disturbed Bill and brought him home
even ahead of time. Snow had fallen heavily above
the timberline a few days before, and now the keen
whistling of the wind and the swift curtaining of
clouds, which was drawing across the sky, threatened
a new storm that might even reach down to the shack.
And yet no Bill appeared.
The brothers waited in the shack,
and the darkness was increasing. Any one of a
number of things might have happened to their father,
but they were not worried. For one thing, they
wasted no love on the stern old man. They knew
well enough that he had plenty of money, but he kept
them here to a dog’s life in the shack, and they
hated him for it. Besides, they had a keen grievance
which obscured any worry about Bill — they
were hungry, wildly hungry. The darkness set in,
and the feeble light wandered from the smoked chimney
of the lantern and made the window black.
Outside, the wind began to scream,
sighing in the distance among the firs, and then pouncing
upon the cabin and shaking it as though in rage.
The fire would smoke in the stove at every one of these
blasts, and the flame leaped in the lantern.
Bull Hunter had to lean closer to
the light and frown to make out the print of his book.
The sight of his stolid immobility merely sharpened
their hunger, for there was never any passion in this
hulk of a man. When he relaxed over a book the
world went out like a snuffed candle for him.
He read slowly, lingering over every page, for now
and again his eyes drifted away from the print, and
he dreamed over what he had read. In reality
he was not reading for the plot, but for the pictures
he found, and he dreaded coming to the end of a book
also, for books were rare in his life. A scrap
of a magazine was a treasure. A full volume was
a nameless delight.
And so he worked slowly through every
paragraph and made it his and dreamed over it until
he knew every thought and every picture by heart.
Once slowly devoured in this way, it was useless to
reread a book. It was far better to simply sit
and let the slow memory of it trail through his mind
link by link, just as he had first read it and with
all the embroiderings which his own fancy had conjured
up.
Often this stupid pondering over a
book would madden the two brothers. It irritated
them till they would move the lantern away from him.
But he always followed the light with a sigh and uncomplainingly
settled down again. Sometimes they even snatched
the book out of his hands. In that case he sat
looking down at his empty fingers, dreaming over his
own thoughts as contentedly as though the living page
were in his vision. There was small satisfaction
in tormenting him in these ways.
Tonight they dared not bother him.
The stained hands were still in their minds, and the
tremendous, joyous laughter as he whirled the stump
over his head still rang in their ears. But they
watched him with a sullen envy of his immobility.
Just as a man without an overcoat envies the woolly
coat of a dog on a windy December day.
Only one sound roused the reader.
It was a sudden loud snorting from the shed behind
the house and a dull trampling that came to him through
the noise of the rising wind. It brought Bull
lurching to his feet, and the stove jingled as his
weight struck the yielding center boards of the floor.
Out into the blackness he strode. The wind shut
around him at once and plastered his clothes against
his body as if he had been drenched to the skin in
water. Then he closed the door.
“What brung him to life?” asked Harry.
“Nothin’, He just heard
ol’ Maggie snort. Always bothers him when
Maggie gets scared of something — the old
fool!”
Maggie was an ancient, broken-down
draft horse. Strange vicissitudes had brought
her up into the mountains via the logging camp.
She was kept, not because there was any real hauling
to be done for Bill Campbell, but because, having
got her for nothing, she reminded him of the bargain
she had been. And Bull, apparently understanding
the sluggish nature of the old mare by sympathy of
kind, use to work her to the single plow among the
rocks of their clearing. Here, every autumn,
they planted seed that never grew to mature grain.
But that was Bill Campbell’s idea of making
a home.
Presently Bull came back and settled
with a slump into his old place.
“Going to snow?” asked Harry.
“Yep.”
“Feel it in the wind?”
It was an old joke among them, for
Bull often declared with ridiculous solemnity that
he could foretell snow by the change in the air.
“Yep,” answered Bull, “I felt the
wind.”
He looked up at them, abashed, but
they were too hungry to waste breath with laughter.
They merely sneered at him as he settled back into
his book. And, just as his head bowed, a far shouting
swept down at them as the wind veered to a new point.
“Uncle Bill!” said Bull and rose again
to open the door.
The others wedged in behind his bulk and stared into
the blackness.